Images

Untitled-95081, 1995

oil on canvas

35 13/16 x 28 5/8 inches

From an Island-98281, 1998

oil on canvas

28 5/8 x 35 13/16 inches

 

Serenity-18001, 2018

acrylic on canvas

38 3/16 x 51 3/16 inches

Serenity-21033, 2021

acrylic on canvas

51 13/16 x 63 3/4 inches

The Wind Blows-230326, 2023

acrylic on canvas

63 3/4 x 51 3/16 inches

The Wind Blows-230322, 2023

acrylic on canvas

51 1/8 x 63 3/4 inches

The Wind Blows-230309, 2023

acrylic on canvas

63 3/4 x 51 3/16 inches

Serenity-221240, 2022

acrylic on canvas

51 1/8 x 38 1/8 inches

Serenity-221235, 2022

acrylic on canvas

51 3/6 x 38 3/16 inches

The Wind Blows-230336, 2023

acrylic on vanvas

71 1/2 x 89 3/8 inches

The Wind Blows-230333, 2023

acrylic on canvas

71 1/2 x 89 3/8 inches

The Wind Blows-230335, 2023

acrylic on canvas

71 9/16 x 89 7/16 inches

Becoming-16-C-147, 2016

glazed ceramic

11 13/16 x 21 1/4 x 14 9/16 inches

Becoming-11-C-079, 2011

glazed ceramic

28 3/8 x 15 3/4 x 9 13/16 inches

Becoming-16-C-141, 2016

ceramic

14 1/2 x 17 3/4 x 16 1/4 inches

Becoming-13-C-158, 2013

glazed ceramic

13 3/4 x 29 1/2 x 7 1/2 inches

Becoming-16-C-142, 2016

glazed ceramic

11 7/16 x 20 1/16 x 11 inches

Becoming-17-C-021, 2017

ceramic

20 7/8 x 14 1/2 x 17 3/4 inches 

Press Release

Locks Gallery is pleased to present an exhibition of paintings and ceramics by renowned Korean artist Lee Kang-So (b. 1943, Daegu, Korea).

Regarded as one of the most influential contemporary artists in Korea, Lee is widely known for his role in the avant-garde art movement of the 1970s and his later paintings from the 1990s onward which contain trace images of boats, ducks, or deer across monochromatic fields of gestural brushstrokes. Fusing influences of Western art history (Modernism, Expressionism, Minimalism) with Eastern philosophies and traditions (Taoism, neo-Confucianism, literati painting), Lee’s artistic practice is grounded in an intuitive, embodied unity between self and object, between breath and movement, rather than driven by pre-determined thought or intention when composing an image or form.

Lee cites the Korean notion of “Pungryu,” roughly translated to universal harmony—or more specifically, “Pungryu-do,” which means the way of wind and flow—as a lifelong pursuit emerging from his discipline and work as an artist. Often using East Asian ink brushes with long handles and soft bristles, his paintings feature bold brushstrokes and calligraphic marks—controlled yet expressive—evoking a sense of spontaneity. His paintings and ceramics have a fluidity and sense of incompleteness that reflect this transient quality of wind and flow, of impermenance and change. Throughout his work he converses with the materials’ physical qualities—the thickness of the paint, the moisture of the clay, and the humidity of the environment—to create what he calls “coincidences” rather than controlled, fixed forms. “I prefer a ‘painting that is painted’ over the expression of ‘painting a painting,’” the artist says, emphasizing his collaboration with materials and their “existence” or “being.”

Lee’s small-scale ceramic sculptures also reveal elements of this non-predetermined approach. By stacking repeating shapes—cylinders, blocks, and cubes—into towers which seem to barely contain themselves under the weight of gravity, Lee embraces the living qualities of clay, creating graceful, seemingly effortless compositions. “The state of kneaded clay, the energy of my body and mind, and their state of unison with the surrounding environment all determine the work at any given moment,” says the artist. “I aspire to the kind of work that, when people look at it, seems different each time it is seen.”

Lee Kang-So: Wind / Flow includes paintings from the artist’s current Serenity series alongside a selection of works from the past 30 years. This is the artist’s first solo exhibition in the U.S. in over a decade, coinciding with his participation in the survey exhibition Only the Young: Experimental Art in Korea, 1960s-1970s at The Guggenheim Museum. The show will be accompanied by a catalog with an essay by Lynn Zelevansky.

Lee Kang-So received his BFA in 1965  from the Seoul National University of Art. In 1986, he founded the art collective ‘Shincheje’ (“New System”), recognized as a starting point on the Korean avant-garde scene, and in 1974 he founded the Contemporary Art Festival in Daegu, Korea. He was a Visiting Artist at the State University of New York at Albany, NY from 1985 to 1986 and participated in the MoMA PS1 Studio Artist Program from 1991 to 1992. Lee has participated in solo and group exhibitions in cities throughout the globe, including Seoul, Tokyo, New York, Venice, Paris, and London. His work is in numerous public and private collections including the Seoul Museum of Art; Busan Museum of Art; the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Gwacheon, Korea; Hom-Am Art Museum, Yongin, Korea; the Rachofsky Collection, Dallas, Texas; and the Victoria & Albert Museum, London, UK; among others. He lives and works in Anseong, Korea. 

Lee Kang-So: Wind / Flow will be on view in the second floor gallery and open to the public Tuesday through Saturday, 10am - 6pm or by appointment.

For all press inquiries, please contact Adrianna Brusie, abrusie@locksgallery.com.

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